Pregame
The Penguins welcome Evgeni Malkin back from a four-game absence with a hand injury, but they have a scratch so late it doesn’t make the lineup card. Bryan Rust does NOT play tonight after taking warmup, his lower body injury keeps him out so Avery Hayes is in the game in place with the top lines all scrambled around at the last moment.
The visiting Red Wings bring the following lineup to town.
First period
Great start
for the Penguins, who are able to keep the momentum from last night’s seven-straight goals to close the game against the Islanders going for a while longer. Pittsburgh strikes 4:19 in, Sidney Crosby wins a puck off the wall and centers for Rickard Rakell. Rakell patiently waits and holds, traffic builds in front of the net and Rakell shoots back against the grain to the top corner. 1-0 Pens.
It’s Anthony Mantha time a few minutes later after a scramble happens right at the goal in front of John Gibson. Mantha is able to collect himself, pull the puck out of the mayhem far enough to lift it back over the dogpile. 2-0 Pens, and Mantha is now a 30-goal scorer in the NHL.
Looks like Jacob Bernard-Docker is trying to give his team a lift by talking Connor Dewar into a fight, which is pretty admirable since it doesn’t look like Bernard-Docker actually knows how to fight. Or maybe he bit off more than he could chew and just hung on for dear life as Dewar sent some glancing blows off him before wrestling him down.
Pittsburgh gets the first power play of the game when Elmer Soderblom gets high-sticked by a former teammate, a most unusual power play occurs where neither team changes any players, it’s all zone time for the Pens and a few looks off the stick of Erik Karlsson, but no goals.
Undeterred, the Pens score shortly after the power play. Egor Chinakhov kinda pulls up on the rush and fires a shot that glances off the defenseman and make the puck change directions to end up going short-side on Gibson. He was already leaning the other way. 3-0 Pens.
Dominant performance, shots are 14-5 PIT. Had Gibson not made a few nice saves there could have been even more damage done than the 3-0 score after 20.
Second period
The Red Wings put Cam Talbot in the net for the start of the second period.
Detroit gets their first power play of the game after Mantha gets himself in trouble on the forecheck for holding/hooking the defender and gets on the board five seconds into it. The Red Wings win the faceoff, Patrick Kane fires a low shot to create a rebound and Dylan Larkin is able to punch in the rebound. 3-1.
The Pens find an answer, Connor Clifton steps in front of a slow clearing attempt and sends a shot back. Justin Brazeau is there to get a small deflection on it near the front of the net. 4-1 game.
Detroit gets a few chances late but can’t shrink the score again in the second period. Sam Girard and Lucas Raymond get too chippy with each other after a whistle in a scrum and we get 4v4 hockey as a result.
Shots in the second are 9-8 Red Wings, the Pens aren’t going full throttle but they’re still engaged enough to maintain.
Third period
Larkin gets called for a tripping minor to grant Pittsburgh a 4v3 power play for a limited amount of time.
In the second night of the b-2-b and up big in this one, the Pens are drifting off now. The Red Wings hit a crossbar really hard, it barely stays out.
Total coast mode for the Pens at this point, Detroit’s able to get into the zone, work it around, Pittsburgh keeps them mostly to the outside and then chips the puck out for the process to repeat. Stuart Skinner earns his supper with some saves, the clock keeps heading to the end.
The Pens get one more goal for the road with 7:51 remaining. Ryan Shea shoots from the point with two players posted up near the goal. Noel Acciari is the closest to the rebound and he fights off no less than Mo Seider to win a battle to punch the puck in. 5-1.
Detroit gets caught with six players on the ice. The top power play gets to work a little stress-free practice, they snap the puck around but don’t score.
Both teams come together and exchange pushes and shoves after the final whistle, won’t change the score at this point. Pens secure the victory.
Some thoughts
- Sidney Crosby entered the night two points behind Steve Yzerman for 7th place all-time on the NHL scoring list. Yzerman, GM and legend of the Red Wings, shame Crosby could only tack on one point to inch closer but not tie or pass on this night. Given the bigger picture, hardly a note anyone ought be concerned with.
- Anything and everything was going the Pens way early. Bryan Rust a very last minute scratch? No worries, just kinda make some last minute changes as you go, it all works out. Rakell and Mantha will score anyways.
- Those two are just scorching hot right now. Rakell now has seven goals in the last five games. Mantha, per Bob Grove, scored three goals over the course of six shots. Always a thing of beauty when really good players start performing at clincal levels.
- A lot has been made (well, OK, maybe more accurately a little) about Blake Lizotte’s absence from the penalty kill. It’s true the PK has been bad without him. Would it be any better with him? Perhaps but that’s a hypothetical that could have any answer you’d want to imagine. Statistically though, there’s a good case to be made it wouldn’t have mattered on the first DRW PPG: Lizotte has only won 43.6% of his 126 PK faceoffs this season. Noel Acciari (the player who took the faceoff and lost it) had won 50.6% of his 189 PK draws. So probability-wise, it’s not like Lizotte would have been likely to prevent the exact same result on that play. (That example aside, it certainly is a big loss and harmful to the PK and team in general to not have Lizotte available).
- Crosby had four hits on the nights officially and these were not getting credit for little bumps, a couple were big hits. One sent Andrew Copp crashing down off his feet. The intensity is definitely ramped up.
- Five shots on goal and eight total attempts for Malkin. Looked pretty good in his return considering his hand was banged up.
- The more I’ve seen of Soderblom, the more I’m liking it. He’s an active player and certainly makes the most of his opportunities to stand out in limited moments. His size alone can kinda make him a novelty in ways but beyond that you can see why the Penguins wanted him. He’s still just scratching the surface of the type of player he could be and seemingly *^this close^* to breaking through and being a force out there. Maybe that eludes him to fully reach his potential but it’s a worthy project to take on and see what could happen. (Can’t hurt the cause that a similarly-sized and skilled prototype in Brazeau had his major breakout this season). Threw this note in any case and stray Detroit people were checking this out of curiosity to see how Soderblom is fitting in. Slightly more impressed than anticipated.
- More surprising occurrence to happen for a second night in a row: chasing the opponent’s goalie or seeing actual, legit hockey fights? Sign of the times that it’s a reasonable question. Really raises the entertainment factor on a game, if you’re cheering for the Penguins, anyways, fights and making the opponent put in their backup goalie are always good fun.
- This game might have been more interesting had Alex Debrincat’s aim been true on two shots that both nailed the crossbar. The Penguins put it in coast for a good bit of this game. Luckily they survived without having to try and turn the competitiveness all the way back on.
- Two more points is huge for the playoff picture, the out of town scores mostly look helpful, though all are incomplete and potentially subject to change. Columbus is tied with Carolina at press time. The Flyers longshot hopes are even on further life support courtesy of losing an unfinished game as of now to Washington. The Islanders are trailing the Sabres. The beauty of winning for the Pens is the out of town scores don’t matter as much, at this part of the year is the biggest factor is one more precious game ticks away for all parties. The runway getting shorter is one of the most important parts of them all.
Line ‘em up and knock ‘em down for the Pens right now. These last two games were long pegged as some of the most crucial and the response for two convincing wins is very encouraging. The race to the finish line isn’t quite over yet and the Pens still do have three games in a four day stretch that begins anew on Thursday night on the road in Tampa.













